A sanitized version of “A Visit from St. Nicholas” edits out all references to Santa Claus’ pipe habit — and critics say it’s yet another example of political correctness run amok.

A one-woman vice squad — self-published Canadian author Pamela McColl — kicked St. Nick’s butt habit in a new version of the beloved poem about “the night before Christmas.”

McColl deleted two verses — “The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth/and the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath”— and hired an illustrator to redraw Santa without his pipe and halo of tobacco haze.

“No one can backtrack now,” McColl crowed to The Post. “Santa has stopped smoking, and 2012 is the year he quit, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it.”

But not everyone is celebrating Kris Kringle going cold turkey after 189 years.

“Leave my story alone! This change is not officially sanctioned by the North Pole,” said Nicholas Trolli, president of the Amalgamated Order of Real Bearded Santas.

Critics wonder if the meddling willl stop at a smokeless Santa.

“Maybe they should talk about the fact that he’s also overweight and that he probably drinks,” griped Jackie Blackwell, “chief elf” and owner of a Canadian Christmas store.

Literary-minded critics accuse McColl of censoring history.

The poem — which is widely attributed to Clement Moore — was first published anonymously on Dec. 23, 1823, in the Sentinel newspaper in upstate Troy. It is considered one of the most famous poems in the English language and the first to present Santa as we know him now: “chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf,” who slides down chimneys carrying presents — and smokes a pipe.

“It’s denying access to the original voice of the author, and that’s censorship,” said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, of the American Library Association, who likened McColl’s alteration to an Alabama publisher’s controversial purging last year of “indecent” language in “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”

Children would be better served to be taught to think critically instead of “hoping for a magic solution by taking away Santa’s pipe,” said Svetlana Mintcheva, director of programs at The National Coalition Against Censorship.

Trolli says the original text presents modern-day Santas with a valuable teaching moment.

“We use the opportunity to tell kids that Santa used to smoke but Miss Claus made him quit,” he said. “So we are telling our Santas to continue using the original version of the book.”

But McColl — who has spent $200,000 of her own money printing 55,500 copies in English, Spanish and French — believes her book will do more good than harm.

“I don’t care how you like your classics,” she said about her detractors. “I care about your children.”

Blackwell was angered enough to send this e-mail to McColl:

“The original and only version of this wonderful verse hangs in my shop and will remain there. I have no interest in your books,” Blackwell wrote. “So for the record, ‘You can put that in your pipe and smoke it.’ ”

What Xmas vices will the PC police tackle next?

* Santa’s new snack: Soy milk; gluten-free cookies.

* Instead of “Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!” Santa says, “Happy holidays to all — or not, if you don’t celebrate one.”